List of English idioms starting with N

Showing 1-6 of 6

Generated image of a man nailing a coffin

Nail in the coffin

Saying another nail in the coffin or the last (or final) nail in the coffin means this is another of a chain of mistakes, poor decisions or bad luck leading to the end or failure of something, like the visual of someone nailing the lid of a coffin closed.

Having our key designer quit was another nail in the coffin for this project.

Photo of two horses racing

Neck and neck

The phrase neck and neck means very close, with no clear winner. It is often used to describe two choices, or two sides of a competion.
The origin is horse racing, where two horses that are very close are described as neck and neck.

The two teams were neck and neck until the end.

Photo of some haystacks

Needle in a haystack

The idiom a needle in a haystack means something very hard to find. It is used when you mean an impossible task to find something.
This idiom draws from the literal image of a needle hidden in a haystack, which if you think about it is something that is very very hard to find.

Finding the right file felt like searching for a needle in a haystack.

Photo of a bud

Nip it in the bud

To nip something in the bud means to stop it early before it gets bigger and becomes more of a problem. This is often used to reference stopping an emerging bad habit.
This idiom comes from gardening, where you can nip off the buds on plants to direct which way they will grow.

Your puppy is chewing the furniture, you'd better nip that in the bud.

Photo of a woman doing pushups

No pain, no gain

The idiom No pain, no gain means that you must endure hardship or effort (pain) to achieve success or improvement (gain). This phrase arose from gym culture in the 1980s, and can be applied to a number of everyday situations.

He believed that working very hard would pay off. No pain, no gain!

Photo of someone with their nose to a grindstone

Nose to the grindstone

The phrase nose to the grindstone means to work hard.
It originates from the literal hard work of sharpening tools on a grinding wheel, where workers who were sharpening knives had to bend close to the stone to work.
Similar idioms are back to the grindstone or the daily grind and are all variations on this idiom.

Well, lunch is over, better go back and put my nose to the grindstone.